Nominal (categorical), and Dependent (it is measured and accounted for, but a researcher cannot manipulate gender).
No, Patient's gender is not a continuous variable. It is discrete variable.
Mean
It is a nominal scale.
No it is qualitative
Nominal (categorical), and Dependent (it is measured and accounted for, but a researcher cannot manipulate gender).
Nominal
yes
yes a gender is a categorical variable
No, Patient's gender is not a continuous variable. It is discrete variable.
No. It is a discrete quantitative variable.
In qualitative variables, nominal data involves categories with no inherent order, such as colors or types of fruit. Ordinal data, on the other hand, includes categories that have a meaningful order or ranking, such as education levels or customer satisfaction ratings.
Gender is nominal. Nominal is categorical only; no ordering scheme. Ordinal level of measurement places some order on the data, but the differences between the data can't be determined or are meaningless.
A nominal variable is a variable measured in current dollars (the value of the dollar for the specific period discussed), and a real variable is a variable measured in constant dollars (the value of the dollar for the base period). That is, a real variable adjusts for the effects of inflation.
An outcome variable is the dependent variable in a study that researchers measure to determine the effect of the independent variable(s). It represents the main result or effect that researchers are studying or trying to understand.
Mean
It is a nominal scale.